The star of Sex Education opens up about having Gillian Anderson as a mother, intimacy coordinators and the ups and downs of social media Every few years, a television series comes along that feels as if it moves forward the idea of what the medium can do.
When Sex Education landed on our screens in early 2019, it was greeted first with bafflement - what is this thing? - then with a dawning realisation that we were in the presence of greatness.
The second season, which Netflix released in January, confirmed the show's classic status, diving deeper into the convoluted lives of its characters with dazzlingly sharp writing and memorable performances, all set against the dreamy, John Hughes-esque atmosphere that suffuses the fictional town of